z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Climate change impacts on living marine resources in the Eastern Tropical Pacific
Author(s) -
Clarke Tayler M.,
Reygondeau Gabriel,
Wabnitz Colette,
Robertson Ross,
IxquiacCabrera Manuel,
López Myrna,
Ramírez Coghi Ana Rosa,
del Río Iglesias José Luis,
Wehrtmann Ingo,
Cheung William W.L.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
diversity and distributions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.918
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1472-4642
pISSN - 1366-9516
DOI - 10.1111/ddi.13181
Subject(s) - habitat , range (aeronautics) , pelagic zone , demersal zone , geography , climate change , oceanography , ecology , upwelling , equator , tropical eastern pacific , fishery , environmental science , pacific ocean , latitude , geology , biology , materials science , geodesy , composite material
Aim Project shifts in the habitat suitability of 505 fish and invertebrate species in the Eastern Tropical Pacific that are likely to occur by the mid‐21st century under “high greenhouse gas emissions” (RCP 8.5) and “strong mitigation” (RCP 2.6) scenarios. Location The Eastern Tropical Pacific Ocean, a discrete biogeographic region from the Gulf of California to northern Peru. Methods Ensemble simulations of climate change effects on fish and invertebrate species caught by four major fisheries in the region, based on four species distribution models and three Earth system models. Results Simulation results indicated that species' habitat suitability increased or remained the same in the northern and southern margins of the Eastern Tropical Pacific but decreased by up to 14% in some fisheries along Central America. The largest declines in the average species habitat suitability index were projected for small pelagic fisheries (up to −46%), while the highest local species turnover was projected for coastal small‐scale fisheries (up to 80%). Under RCP 8.5, species in the southern half and northern equatorial region of the Eastern Tropical Pacific were projected to shift south‐east at a rate of approximately 30–60 km decade ‐1 , respectively. Demersal species were projected to move into shallower, inshore waters with a shift in depth centroids estimated at a rate of around 1 to 13 m decade − 1 . Range shifts towards the equator reflect movements to cooler habitats that are characteristic of equatorial upwelling systems. Range shifts towards shallower, inshore waters reflect habitat compression associated with the expansion of oxygen minimum zones. Main conclusions Our findings highlight the importance of local‐scale oceanographic and biological data to elucidate the multidimensional biogeographic shifts of key species, their potential impacts on fisheries in the region and the need to consider such shifts in the design of effective conservation and marine resource management measures.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here